Bela Gold


Bela Gold, also Bill Gold,, was a Hungarian-born American businessman and professor.

Biography

Bela Gold was born on 30 January 1915, in Kolozsvár. His parents were Esther and Leo Gold, a dry goods salesman. His brother was William Gold. In 1920, the family emigrated to the U.S.
In the early 1940s, Gold began work at the Senate Subcommittee on War Mobilization, while his wife Sonya worked in government as well, for a time for Harry Dexter White.
The Golds were spied upon by J Edgar Hoover's FBI for a time in the 1940s.
The Golds came to testify at the House Unamerican Activities Committee because of the accusations of Elizabeth Bentley. The Golds denied working with the Soviets and denied they were members of the communist party. Haynes, Klehr, and Vassiliev wrote a book published in 2009 claiming that the Golds were recruited to give information to Soviet agents. Some of their work has been debated by other historians.
After the war, Bill Gold went to the University of Pittsburgh and became a professor. He later became a research director at Case Western Reserve University, and eventually a professor at Claremont Graduate School. He also worked on the National Research Council and wrote several books.

Personal and death

In 1938, Gold married Sonia Steinman Gold.
Gold died aged 96 on 14 April 2012.